Violations – Examples

As stated in the Academic Integrity Policy, any “violation of the expectation of academic integrity is academic misconduct.” Such misconduct can take many forms, and no list can be considered a complete list, but what follows tries to explain or exemplify the most common kinds of academic misconduct. The list presented here began as examples and definitions presented in past editions of UCA’s Student Handbook.

Cheating is a general category of academic misconduct that, in the context of an academic course, involves dishonesty in completing work in the course — whether an examination or other kind of assignment. Assisting another student dishonestly is also cheating. Note that plagiarism, fabrication of research results, and other such violations of academic integrity may correctly be identified as particular kinds of cheating. Examples of cheating include, but are not limited to, the following:

knowingly discovering or attempting to discover the contents of an examination before the contents are released by the instructor

taking a picture of or otherwise copying an examination without permission to do so

providing such a picture/copy to another person

obtaining, using, or attempting to obtain or use any material or device dishonestly

supplying or attempting to supply any material or device to another person dishonestly

obtaining or attempting to obtain unauthorized information during the course of an examination from another student or another student’s test materials

unauthorized possessing, taking, copying, or sharing of solutions manuals or computerized solutions for assigned homework or research problems

A less obvious kind of cheating occurs when a student submits a single work (an essay, for example, or report) to two different instructors in fulfillment of two different assignments without having the permission of both instructors to use the work in this way.

Plagiarism is that particular kind of cheating that involves using someone else’s words, ideas, or other intellectual property as if they (the words, ideas, or other intellectual property) were one’s own original work. Some common kinds of plagiarism are listed here:

Because the richly varied resources of the Internet make copying the work of others easy, a particularly common kind of plagiarism occurs when someone reproduces or closely imitates one or more documents from the Internet and claims that the resulting essay or research paper is the copier’s own work.

Similar issues of dishonesty are raised by term paper sites or custom term paper writing services where one can purchase a term paper, research paper, or essay.

Submitting as one’s own an assignment prepared by another student is an obvious form of plagiarism.

At other times, plagiarism occurs because a student does not understand the necessity or the mechanisms for acknowledging the words, ideas, or other intellectual property of others.

Any academic work involving sources requires careful judgment on the part of the student, and many instructors will provide specific guidance about the use and acknowledgement of sources. In any case, the student should be prepared to ask questions about this issue before submitting papers rather than to plead ignorance afterwards.

Fabrication is cheating by faking results, as of an experiment, or otherwise “making up” something that one presents as true, factual, or real. Fabrication in an academic context may occur in a number of forms, including these:

falsifying research results or a report of research processes

falsifying reports or records related to a field, practicum, or clinical experience

In whatever context it occurs, fabrication is fraudulent and obviously has no place in an academic context.